James Rhodes - you are amazing because you are so real :--). Thank you for your transparency and your love for music! You have overcome much in life and live beautifully with all your heart and mind. Life is full of suffering, music gives us and you the eternal voice. Thank you for who you are!
absolute bollocks.- why should an artist dress/desire to look visibly neat fashionably? how does that affect or determine their expression when performing a piece of music.
My perspective as a recording engineer and as a keyboardist - the mics are too loud for the piano, and you can tell they didn't sound check before the recording... the audio clipping in the Rach during the fortissimo section just ruined whatever was underneath; you could barely hear the piano under the static. I do wish the engineers had their wits about them - with such an acoustically dead room, just a touch of reverb would go a long way, especially to the pianist, since it would have changed his interpretation/phrasing. While I don't really agree with some of the tempi and phrasing, I do like the imperfections in the performance, it gives the piece some added charm... it is as if you can hear both the composer and pianist both breaking down in a fit of passion.
I have read two of James´ books and absolutely loved them. His playing is so full of emotion and his narration is great too. He has inspired me to play the Bach prelude in C major, which I didn´t know existed before reading his book. Anyways I posted a video where I play this beautiful piece and encourage everyone out there to try playing the piano. It is one of the ways I try to understand this world we live in.
Shameful to not mention Dudley Moore before playing that. Fair play for promoting classical music though and I love his version of the Bach Busoni Fugue in C major.
Apart from the blues, Classical music is THE largest influence on Rock n Roll and Heavy Metal. It began with the Beatles, who in their English sensibilities, intuitively infused classical instruments and textures into their classic rock stylings. It was taken to the next level with Deep Purple, founded by classically trained guitarist Ritchie Blackmore and organist Jon Lord. They were the first rock group to play live with a symphony orchestra.
Cliff Burton, the original bass player for Metallica, was a classically trained pianist, and was largely responsible for turning the thrash style of the band into something much more symphony; incorporating complex dual guitar melodies and extended interludes. On every early album, they feature an 8+minute instrumental. In summary, the composers of old would VERY MUCH enjoy and perform rock and metal. One look at Mr. Rhodes' performance proves this point.
I can read Cyrillic and the tattoo does say Sergei Rachmaninov so you're lucky there :) Great talk and I loved the piece at the end, put me in mind of Bill Bailey's Classical Cockney routine.
Great talk, and for those who do not know Glenn Gould, Bruno Monsaingeon made quite a few films on him.Type Glenn Gould in You Tube and see for yourself. A Canadian genius ( well I am Canadian) ;-)
I went to his "show" yesterday, it was quite entertaining until the encore, which he also plays here at the end. I don't mind him inventing stories for daft audience like us to keep the "classical music" exciting but announcing that he would finish with Beethoven and playing Dudley Moore's parody with Piers Lane's added improvisation badly as if it were all done by him is a bit too much!
Yes but James Rhodes is 40, I still sometimes think Rostropovich died a few years ago, because it seems like such a recent time in the scope of things.
Simultaneously, Led Zeppelin's Jimmy Page is a master composer, infusing their metal-roots sound with an extremely classical heritage. And the title song of the group Black Sabbath, was derived from the classical work, "Mars" by Holst. It incorporates the Tri-Tone, or "Devil's Note," forever infusing the lineage of heavy metal with its signature evil, dark tones.
Interesting, I doubt think I would have recognized this except for a couple of measures or so at the very end. Is the entire piece based on the Moonlight?
YOU SHOULD PLAY, AND STOP TALKING, BECAUSE words BELONG TO THE SAME ENERGY OF sounds AS MUSIC, AND sounds ARE energies OF life or death. LEARN THE MELODY OF WORDS, AND IMAGINE THAT IT IS MUSIC FOR YOU AND OTHERS.
Hey! I wear sneakers, get high, and think that all forms of snobbery are abhorrent. Isn't the x factor laughable? Haha, yeah, it's shit. Rim a tramp! Woah, right? Hey, we're just like you. Now, it's really important that classical musicians stop ingratiating themselves. Haha, check it out, if Beethoven got high, I reckon he'd make a mash up of his sonatas with some of Schubert's sonatas and put that River Kwai march on it. That's just the sort of gimmicky shit that'll make you like us, right?
Great playing, but the child inside me still hears "COMET, IT MAKES YOUR MOUTH TURN GREEN. COMET, DOES DAMAGE TO YOUR SPLEEN. SO BUY SOME COMET, AND VOMIT, TODAYYYY!!!!!"
I agree, the middle section sounded extremely messy and unorganized.... This isn't his best interpretation of the piece though, he has a few other recordings on his TH-cam Channel which aren't bad :)
Daniel S. Gleason Strangely enough, the more i listen to this version the more I like it. The mistakes actually add to the darkness of the piece, as if everything (pianist included) just broke down.
if the mics didn't clip in the fortissimo section I would say I could listen to this again, his mistakes included. I always actually like when there are some detectable mistakes - it somehow humanizes the music and you then remember that humans aren't perfect
+Katrina Preston Malcolm is right. Not only was he bashing the piano, the prelude was weird and sloppy. Not even a good talk. Clearly he hasn't performed much.
James Rhodes - you are amazing because you are so real :--). Thank you for your transparency and your love for music! You have overcome much in life and live beautifully with all your heart and mind. Life is full of suffering, music gives us and you the eternal voice. Thank you for who you are!
Everything you say ... i AGREE with !!!
Dude is a genius and so down to earth. Brilliant.
Very true , seems like people take him the wrong way...
Great music loving bloke.
Everyone could benefit from listening to James Rhodes - what an amazing musician and a truly inspiring man!
He is my favourite pianist. He is so right about classical music not having to be so serious.
absolute bollocks.- why should an artist dress/desire to look visibly neat fashionably? how does that affect or determine their expression when performing a piece of music.
he is so charismatic and talented. I love listening to him playing and hearing his interviews on spotify over and over again.
My perspective as a recording engineer and as a keyboardist - the mics are too loud for the piano, and you can tell they didn't sound check before the recording... the audio clipping in the Rach during the fortissimo section just ruined whatever was underneath; you could barely hear the piano under the static. I do wish the engineers had their wits about them - with such an acoustically dead room, just a touch of reverb would go a long way, especially to the pianist, since it would have changed his interpretation/phrasing. While I don't really agree with some of the tempi and phrasing, I do like the imperfections in the performance, it gives the piece some added charm... it is as if you can hear both the composer and pianist both breaking down in a fit of passion.
They also need to turn the gain on the vocal mic's Down! The PUHH and mouth Clack and S's ect, makes some of these very hard to listen to!
It's not the mics, but the pianist!
Means will sound better quality sound 💜 Thanks
This dude is freakin' AWESOME!!! It's about damn time that someone speaks up for classical musicians!!!!
Not the most compelling Ted Talk I've ever seen, but what a wonderful person James Rhodes is, and his playing is so passionate.
This man made me love classical music ten times more than I already do. Which is..basicaly a clinical case you know..
Love you for everything you stand for. God bless
God bless ? Your going to bless a man with the filth that comes out of his mouth? Sick
I love everything he is saying. Listeners of classical music need to stop being so precious!
Reminds me of what I heard in the 1980s Dudley Moore .... oh dear
Love it and love your passion for and you playing music! Bravo 👏🏽 👏🏽👏🏽🎶🙏🏽💜
Don't apologise for loving classical music!
I have read two of James´ books and absolutely loved them. His playing is so full of emotion and his narration is great too. He has inspired me to play the Bach prelude in C major, which I didn´t know existed before reading his book. Anyways I posted a video where I play this beautiful piece and encourage everyone out there to try playing the piano. It is one of the ways I try to understand this world we live in.
I love the Dudley Moore pastiche at the end.
Shameful to not mention Dudley Moore before playing that. Fair play for promoting classical music though and I love his version of the Bach Busoni Fugue in C major.
This is the most wonderful and inspiring video. James Rhodes for President is what I say!! :-))
Anaesthesia - Pulling teeth.
That's a Burton Classic.
"Bass Solo Take One!!"
You make me want to DISCOVER!! Thank You !!!!
New name suggestion for Classical: Acoustic Prog. It still won't be played on the radio, but it will sound cooler.
authentic, lovable
Thank you. 🌻
Apart from the blues, Classical music is THE largest influence on Rock n Roll and Heavy Metal. It began with the Beatles, who in their English sensibilities, intuitively infused classical instruments and textures into their classic rock stylings. It was taken to the next level with Deep Purple, founded by classically trained guitarist Ritchie Blackmore and organist Jon Lord. They were the first rock group to play live with a symphony orchestra.
That was beautiful. I really enjoyed it.
Cliff Burton, the original bass player for Metallica, was a classically trained pianist, and was largely responsible for turning the thrash style of the band into something much more symphony; incorporating complex dual guitar melodies and extended interludes. On every early album, they feature an 8+minute instrumental. In summary, the composers of old would VERY MUCH enjoy and perform rock and metal. One look at Mr. Rhodes' performance proves this point.
Humans are the crossroead between heaven & hell. They can express such beauty.
i hear you 🙏🏻
I can read Cyrillic and the tattoo does say Sergei Rachmaninov so you're lucky there :) Great talk and I loved the piece at the end, put me in mind of Bill Bailey's Classical Cockney routine.
He's nuts. And he's amazing.
Awesome!
Good talk, nice playing. Just don't know why he passes off Dudley Moore's work off at the end as his own?
I'm glad somebody else noticed that!!!!
He did?
Great talk, and for those who do not know Glenn Gould,
Bruno Monsaingeon made quite a few films on him.Type Glenn Gould in You Tube and see for yourself.
A Canadian genius ( well I am Canadian) ;-)
Do you mean the whole thing, or the end of the piece? If you mean the very end, it was Moonlight Sonata he started to play just before finishing.
Wow, he's amazing!
So much intensity..
Wow !!! well played
Hi ! Could we add a french translation of the subtitles in this video ? We can send you one if you need.
Could anybody tell me the name of the CD he recommends in minute 16:30? English isn't my mother tongue and I don't understand what he says there.
Glenn Gould playing Bach's Goldberg variations
Thank you!
"Glenn Gould...died a few years ago"? Gould died in 1982, my friend!
What are the names of both songs, beginning and end?
The song at the beginning is: Rachmaninoff Prelude Op 3 No 2 in C Sharp minor
Prelude in C. Missed a few and was a bit erratic. Rachmaninovs own version the best though Hough's good and Kissim's smooth.
When you have one of the most talented pianists performing and screwup the audio by clipping it. 🙄
Nice finale......just as Dudley Moore played a la Beethoven parody.
Does anyone know what he played at the end?
I am fan of your playing usually but I don't know what you are doing with the tempo :-s
I went to his "show" yesterday, it was quite entertaining until the encore, which he also plays here at the end. I don't mind him inventing stories for daft audience like us to keep the "classical music" exciting but announcing that he would finish with Beethoven and playing Dudley Moore's parody with Piers Lane's added improvisation badly as if it were all done by him is a bit too much!
Yes but James Rhodes is 40, I still sometimes think Rostropovich died a few years ago, because it seems like such a recent time in the scope of things.
I just typed that further up, i had no idea you typed this down below lol
Simultaneously, Led Zeppelin's Jimmy Page is a master composer, infusing their metal-roots sound with an extremely classical heritage. And the title song of the group Black Sabbath, was derived from the classical work, "Mars" by Holst. It incorporates the Tri-Tone, or "Devil's Note," forever infusing the lineage of heavy metal with its signature evil, dark tones.
JR's little tidbit where says snobbery is 'abhorrent' is hideously ironic...
What is the Beethoven piece he plays at the end?
+fcmilsweeper9 The beginning of the first movement from the Moonlight sonata (Sonata #14 In C Sharp Minor, Op. 27/2).
Interesting, I doubt think I would have recognized this except for a couple of measures or so at the very end. Is the entire piece based on the Moonlight?
I wanted to be like Rubinstein but seems to be TODAY closer to his great criticman Kriebl
Just wow.
Lo que se siente al oír beethoven I-V-I-V-I-V-V...
Good talk, for some reason i did not like the sound of the piano.... And i love the piece at the end even if it isn't by Beethoven hahaha
amazing piece, i hope to play it next life ... around 2.36 maybe some chord wrong, isn´t it?
Ah yes, in typical Beethoven fashion, a piece that has a longer ending than the main part of the song.
mukemmell yorum
Goethe: "Architecture is frozen music!"
yep 233 sure did bight the bullet so to speek you could feel it three measures before that he was uncertain of himself. not a bad recovery though
i never imagined all the foul words after bbc
YOU SHOULD PLAY, AND STOP TALKING, BECAUSE words BELONG TO THE SAME ENERGY OF sounds AS MUSIC, AND sounds ARE energies OF life or death. LEARN THE MELODY OF WORDS, AND IMAGINE THAT IT IS MUSIC FOR YOU AND OTHERS.
snobbery was somehow in the 2nd piece
Hey! I wear sneakers, get high, and think that all forms of snobbery are abhorrent. Isn't the x factor laughable? Haha, yeah, it's shit. Rim a tramp! Woah, right? Hey, we're just like you. Now, it's really important that classical musicians stop ingratiating themselves. Haha, check it out, if Beethoven got high, I reckon he'd make a mash up of his sonatas with some of Schubert's sonatas and put that River Kwai march on it. That's just the sort of gimmicky shit that'll make you like us, right?
💎
Wow
Great playing, but the child inside me still hears "COMET, IT MAKES YOUR MOUTH TURN GREEN. COMET, DOES DAMAGE TO YOUR SPLEEN. SO BUY SOME COMET, AND VOMIT, TODAYYYY!!!!!"
He looks very nervous whilst playing but a good effort anyway.
Exactly the kind of pomp he was talking about...
sense
Dudley Moore's Beethoven Parody..
Apparently in this day and age having manners is pompous...
Learn how to pronounce someone's name is common decency.
OK, I'm sorry to Rhode's fanboys but the Rachmaninoff prelude was unlistenable. The talk was soso, funny but didn't go anywhere.
I agree, the middle section sounded extremely messy and unorganized.... This isn't his best interpretation of the piece though, he has a few other recordings on his TH-cam Channel which aren't bad :)
Daniel S. Gleason Strangely enough, the more i listen to this version the more I like it. The mistakes actually add to the darkness of the piece, as if everything (pianist included) just broke down.
Mario Rossi hmm that is true, and he does seem a bit off of it, broken down as you put it.
He's not the most controlled pianist, but he can play quite well, as demonstrated in other performances. The bad piano didn't help matters.
if the mics didn't clip in the fortissimo section I would say I could listen to this again, his mistakes included. I always actually like when there are some detectable mistakes - it somehow humanizes the music and you then remember that humans aren't perfect
Do lisren to Dudley moore because it's so much better piano playing. Sorry, but that's a fact.
architecture is frozen in music :)
The Rachmaninoff prelude was weird and sloppy.
Guessing you didn't listen to the speech then..?
Piano is a bit out of tune - and the room is acoustically dead - shame - I like his passion for Life, and music!
Sounds like he is just bashing the piano hard lol
+Katrina Preston Malcolm is right. Not only was he bashing the piano, the prelude was weird and sloppy. Not even a good talk. Clearly he hasn't performed much.
+Spock Johnson well can you perform better?
SNYCE
yes
Spock Johnson proof?